Welcome to 
												Arezzo 
												from Jesse's Journeys in Italy
												
												Population:  91,582 
												(2003) 
												Official website: 
												
												Arezzo 
												Wikipedia:
												
												Arezzo 
												Map:
												
												MapQuest 
												
												
												Arezzo descends down a 
												steep hill overlooking no less 
												than four vineyard covered 
												Tuscan valleys, the Tiberina,
												Casentino, Valdarno 
												and Valdichiana.  
												Great views and a sophisticated 
												Tuscan atmosphere await those 
												who make the climb up its principal street, via 
												del Corso, from the lower gates to the 
												upper part of the city. 
												
												
												There you 
												will find the Duomo, the
												City Hall, and various 
												other important buildings, such 
												as the Palazzo Vasari, 
												facing the expansive 
												Piazza Grande.  Along 
												the way, and on the streets that 
												branch off the Piazza, you will 
												discover many fine boutiques, 
												restaurants, cafes and 
												gelaterias. 
												
												
												If 
												you are a movie fan, you may 
												find the surroundings of the 
												Piazza Grande somewhat 
												familiar: Arezzo is the 
												principal setting for
												Roberto Begnigni's wonderful 
												film, "Life 
												is Beautiful".  (Begnini 
												was born in nearby 
												Misericordia). 
												
												
												The Duomo - the Cathedral of 
												San Donato - Arezzo's patron 
												saint - is impressive, as are 
												many of the other churches in 
												and around Arezzo.  The 
												tomb of Pope Gregory VI is in 
												the Duomo, along with beautiful 
												stained glass windows.  
												But, special mention goes to 
												Chiesa Santa Maria della 
												Pieve, an extraordinary 
												example of 
												
												Romanesque
												architecture, and to Chiesa 
												San Francesco, where you 
												will stand in awe of a gorgeous 
												cycle of frescoes on the Life of 
												the True Cross 
												painted in the 16th century by 
												the inimitable 
												
												Piero della Francesco.  
												The artist, 
												
												Cimabue, created a 
												fabulous crucifix which hangs in 
												the Chiesa San Domenico. 
												
												
												Neither does Arezzo not want for 
												museums:  there is a 
												State Museum of Medieval and 
												Modern Art; a Civic 
												Musuem of Contemporary and 
												Modern Art, and a Diocesan 
												Museum, and the also an Gaio 
												Cilnio Mecenate Archaeological 
												Museum.  Museum-goers 
												should also keep an eye out for 
												the Casa-Museo Ivan Bruschi, 
												Palazzo Vasari, and Casa del Petrarca. 
												
												
												If you are a lover of Italian 
												festivals, come in July for the
												Abruzzo Wave and enjoy a 
												week of rock concerts and 
												related events.  If you 
												want something more evocative of 
												Abruzzo's medieval heritage, 
												come in late August-early 
												September for the Joust of 
												the Saracens.  Riders 
												and horses dressed in medieval 
												garb carry lances and charge a 
												Saracen effigy through a 
												boistrous throng. 
												
												
												Once you've had your fill of all 
												things man-made, be sure to take time to 
												move through charming medieval 
												streets to the periphery of the 
												upper city where you will find 
												vantage points from where you 
												may look into the 
												surrounding Tuscan landscape.  
												These prospects are a wonderful tonic for 
												the harried soul! 
												
												
												The present day, manifesting an 
												ancient past, is more than 
												enough for most.  But, for history buffs, we offer this 
												merest summary of Arezzo's 
												evolution over a long period of 
												time. 
												
												
												The hill upon which Arezzo now 
												sits was settled as long ago as 
												800 BC by the
												Etruscans, 
												and eventually became one of the 
												twelve most important cities in 
												Etruria - together known as the
												Dodecapoli.  The 
												Etruscans absorbed or displaced 
												the original Villanovan 
												tribes, whose life here dates 
												from well before the Bronze Age. 
												
												
												Nothing remains of the 
												Villanovans, and apart from 
												fragments of their enormous 
												walls, a few scattered 
												foundations, and various 
												unearthed household objects, and 
												objects of art, not much remains 
												of the Etruscans. 
												
												
												The
												
												Romans conquered Arezzo in 
												the 3rd century BC, and as 
												Arretium, the city prospered 
												as an administrative and 
												military center.  After the 
												fall of Rome, the city suffered 
												the same vicissitudes as other 
												Tuscan towns and cities, but 
												endured. 
												
												
												Arezzo was made an Episcopal 
												seat very early in the Christian 
												era, and its Bishops, as nearly 
												omnipotent feudal lords, 
												exercised immense secular power, 
												at times even contesting the 
												power of the Pope. 
												
												
												In 1384 Arezzo, one of several 
												powerful city states that 
												developed during the middle 
												ages, succumbed to the greater 
												power of Florence under the
												
												Medicis, and found itself 
												firmly within the Grand Duchy 
												of Tuscany.  The 
												Medicis, ever protective of 
												their interests, built an 
												impressive and intimidating 
												fortress in the city. 
												 
												
												
												Under Florentine rule Arezzo 
												continued to prosper as an 
												agricultural center and as a 
												place of manufacture of a unique 
												metal pottery called bucchero
												that had been made here long 
												before the Renaissance, but it 
												began a long period of decline 
												in the late 16th century. 
												
												
												Like other Tuscan cities, the 
												people of Arezzo endured the 
												centuries long inter-city and 
												internecine fighting between the
												
												Guelphs (supporters of the 
												Pope) and the
												
												Ghibelline's (supporters of 
												the
												
												Holy Roman Empire), Arezzo, 
												for the most part, taking the 
												side of the latter. 
												
												
												In the very late 18th century 
												Later, the city was conquered by
												
												Napoleon's troops, a 
												conquest the independent minded 
												citizens heartily resisted with 
												a legendary underground movement 
												that came to be known as "Viva 
												Maria". 
												
												
												In the mid-19th century, 
												Tuscany, and with it Arezzo, was 
												annexed to Italy.  In the 
												20th century, when the fascists 
												under
												
												Mussolini went to war, the 
												city suffered heavy damage as 
												the Allies swept up the Italian 
												peninsula to drive out the 
												Nazis. 
												
												
												Today, this city of 90,000 plus 
												people bustles with activity, 
												the seat of government for the 
												Province of Arezzo and supported 
												by an array of secondary and 
												tertiary industry.  The 
												city also earns its keep out of 
												the pockets of tourists, most of 
												whom arrive during the hot 
												months of July and August.  
												Our advice - come during the 
												late spring or early fall - and 
												miss the crowds. 
												
												by Vian Andrews, 
												November 13th, 2005  | 
												
												
													
														
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															Region of Tuscany  | 
														 
														
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															43° 28‘ North; 11° 
															53‘ East   | 
														 
														
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															Directions  | 
														 
														
															
															
															
															By car: 80 km 
															SW of
															
															Florence, via 
															the A1.  245 km 
															north of
															
															Rome via the A1. 
															
															64 km ENE of
															
															Siena, and 41 km 
															W of
															
															Citta di Castello. 
															 
															By train: 
															main lines from 
															Florence and Rome.  
															The station opens to 
															Via del Corso, the 
															principal street in 
															Arezzo. | 
														 
														
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															Directory  | 
														 
														
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										Tourist Office 
										Piazza del Republica 28  (near 
										train station) 
										0575-377-678  | 
														 
														
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															Petrarch  | 
														 
														
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															Restaurants  | 
														 
														
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															Antica Osteria 
															L'Agania - Via 
															Mazzini 10 - rustic 
															food, cosy 
															
															Fiaschetteria de 
															Redi - Via de 
															Redi 10 - wine bar - 
															osteria - top notch 
															food 
															
															
															Il Saraceno - 
															Via Mazzini 10a - 
															traditional Tuscan 
															cuisine 
															
															
															La Buca di San 
															Francesco - Via 
															di San Francesco - 
															pricey, good 
															
															
															JB Liquidbar 
															- Via di Tolletta - 
															hip, modern 
															
															
															Il Gelato - 
															Via de Cenci 24 - 
															fab ice cream  | 
														 
														
															
															
															
															Arezzo is the 
															birthplace of 
															
															
															Petrarch, 
															the greatest poet of 
															the 
															Roman age. | 
														 
														
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															In the Uffizi 
															Gallery in 
															
															
															
															Florence 
															you will find a 
															magnificent 
															sculpture of a lion 
															- well, not a lion - 
															a Chimaera. 
															It was dug-up in 
															Arezzo in 1533, and 
															represents the most 
															magnificent of all 
															surviving 
															
															
															
															Etruscan 
															works.  It 
															dates to the 7th 
															Century BC...and is 
															testament to a once 
															great civilization. | 
														 
														
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															Near the train 
															station look for 
															what appears to be 
															the statue of a 
															surly lion.  
															(There are actually 
															two in the city.)  
															The "lion" is a 
															replica of the most 
															famous of all 
															Etruscan statues - 
															The Chimaera - 
															unearthed in Arezzo 
															in 1533 and carted 
															off to Florence, 
															where it now sits in 
															the Uffizi. | 
														 
														
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															The Chimaera, Arezzo
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                                        Tell us about your trip to Arezzo. What were your favorite places to visit, 
										stay, and dine? 
															
															
															
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